- Early retirees face a health insurance gap between retirement and Medicare at 65 that can last 3-10 years
- ACA marketplace through Access Health CT is typically the best option — subsidies based on income, not assets
- COBRA costs 102% of full group premium ($600-$2,200+/month for most CT residents) and lasts only 18 months
- Losing employer coverage at retirement triggers a 60-day Special Enrollment Period for the ACA marketplace
- The 400% FPL income cliff may have returned for 2026 if enhanced ARP subsidies were not extended — income planning critical
- Roth IRA distributions do not count in MAGI and are a key tool for keeping ACA-qualifying income low
- HSA funds can be used tax-free for medical expenses without affecting MAGI
- COBRA and ACA marketplace coverage do NOT protect against Medicare late enrollment penalties — enroll in Medicare during your Initial Enrollment Period at 65
- Connecticut
- Start Medicare planning at least one year before age 65 to avoid enrollment mistakes and IRMAA surcharges
Retiring before age 65 in Connecticut sets off a health insurance countdown. Medicare eligibility begins at 65—no earlier, with narrow exceptions—so anyone who leaves the workforce at 55, 60, or 62 faces a coverage gap that can run from three to ten years. That gap is not just an insurance inconvenience; it is one of the most significant financial risks in the early retirement picture. A single serious illness before Medicare kicks in can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars out of pocket without adequate coverage. Connecticut early retirees in 2026 have five primary paths to coverage: COBRA continuation from an employer, ACA Marketplace plans through Access Health CT, employer-sponsored retiree health benefits, coverage as a dependent on a spouse’s employer plan, and Medicaid through Connecticut’s HUSKY program if income qualifies. Each option has a different cost structure, coverage quality, and strategic implication for your overall retirement plan.
What Is the Early Retiree Health Insurance Gap and Why Does It Matter?
The early retiree health insurance gap is the period between the day your employer-sponsored coverage ends and the day you become eligible for Medicare at age 65. For someone retiring at 60, that gap is five years. For someone leaving work at 55, it is a full decade. During this period, you are entirely responsible for arranging and paying for your own health coverage. The costs are substantial: the average pre-Medicare health care expenditure for a healthy 60-year-old is $7,000-$15,000 per year, and that figure rises sharply with any significant health event.
The financial stakes extend beyond premium costs. Without coverage, a hospitalization, a cancer diagnosis, or an orthopedic procedure can produce five- or six-figure medical bills. Even with coverage, the cost-sharing structure of the plan you choose determines your exposure. Choosing the wrong plan—or worse, going uninsured to save premium costs—is one of the leading causes of premature depletion of early retirement savings. Health insurance costs must be modeled explicitly in any early retirement financial plan, not treated as an afterthought.
Sources: HealthCare.gov Early Retirement Coverage
For Connecticut residents retiring before 65, health insurance—not housing, not food—is frequently the single largest monthly budget item. Before committing to an early retirement date, model the full cost of health coverage from your retirement date to age 65 at every scenario: COBRA for 18 months, then ACA marketplace, then Medicare. Include expected premium, deductible, and out-of-pocket exposure. If the numbers don’t work, delaying retirement by one to three years to maintain employer coverage can be worth more than it appears.
Option 1: COBRA Continuation Coverage — Keep Your Employer Plan
COBRA—the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act—gives you the right to continue your employer’s group health plan for up to 18 months after leaving your job. You must elect COBRA within 60 days of receiving notice (typically sent by your employer or the plan administrator after your last day). COBRA continuation covers you with the exact same plan you had at work: same network, same doctors, same formulary, same cost-sharing structure. The critical difference is cost: you now pay the full group premium, including the share your employer previously paid on your behalf, plus a 2% administrative fee.
Sources: DOL COBRA Information
COBRA is most rational as a bridge when: you are within 18 months of Medicare eligibility and value continuity over cost; you have an ongoing treatment relationship or scheduled procedure with in-network providers that you do not want to disrupt; or your retirement income is high enough that ACA subsidies would be minimal anyway, making COBRA’s comprehensive coverage competitive with ACA Gold or Platinum premiums. For most Connecticut early retirees who are more than 18 months from Medicare eligibility, COBRA serves as a short bridge before transitioning to an ACA marketplace plan.
How to Calculate Your COBRA Cost Before Retiring
Your COBRA premium is 102% of the full group premium—your prior employee contribution plus the employer’s share of the premium, then multiplied by 1.02. Most employees do not know their employer’s total contribution because they only see their own paycheck deduction. To find your actual COBRA cost, request the Summary Plan Description from your HR department before you retire—this document discloses the total group premium. Alternatively, the COBRA election notice sent after termination will state the premium amount.
Your paycheck shows $250/month deducted for health insurance. Your employer pays an additional $800/month. The total group premium is $1,050/month. Your COBRA premium is $1,050 x 1.02 = $1,071/month — or $12,852 per year — for the same plan that cost you only $3,000 per year while employed. For a couple, these figures often double. This is the COBRA reality check most early retirees are surprised by when they first see the number.
Connecticut group premiums are among the highest in the New England region due to the state’s high health care costs. Before assuming COBRA is affordable, run the numbers against your actual post-retirement budget. If COBRA would consume 20-30% of your monthly income, an ACA marketplace plan with subsidies may provide comparable coverage at significantly lower cost—particularly if your retirement income is structured to fall below the higher FPL thresholds.
Option 2: ACA Marketplace Coverage Through Access Health CT
The ACA Marketplace is frequently the best long-term solution for Connecticut early retirees, especially those who can manage their taxable income strategically. Leaving an employer-sponsored plan is a qualifying life event that triggers a Special Enrollment Period—you have 60 days from your last day of employer coverage to enroll in a marketplace plan through Access Health CT. Coverage begins the first day of the month following enrollment (or the first of the following month, depending on when in the month you enroll).
Sources: Access Health CT
The ACA marketplace offers several critical advantages for early retirees that COBRA does not. You cannot be denied coverage or charged more because of pre-existing conditions. Every marketplace plan covers the ten categories of essential health benefits. Premium tax credits are available based on your income—not your assets—meaning a retiree with substantial savings but modest annual income may qualify for significant subsidy help. The breadth of plan options on Access Health CT allows you to calibrate premium versus out-of-pocket trade-offs precisely to your health usage patterns.
When you retire and lose employer-sponsored coverage, the clock starts immediately. You have 60 days from the date your employer coverage ends to enroll in an ACA marketplace plan through Access Health CT. Do not wait until the last minute. Access Health CT may require documentation of your prior coverage and its termination date. Starting the application within the first week of losing coverage gives you time to shop carefully and handle any document verification without rushing.
How Does Retirement Income Affect ACA Subsidy Eligibility?
ACA premium tax credits are calculated based on Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI)—not assets, not net worth, not savings balances. This distinction is critical for early retirees. A Connecticut resident with a $1.5 million portfolio but only $40,000 in MAGI from pension income, IRA withdrawals, and dividends may qualify for substantial premium tax credits, while the same person drawing $90,000 in taxable income per year would receive little or no subsidy. MAGI includes wages, pension income, taxable IRA and 401(k) withdrawals, taxable Social Security benefits, rental income, interest, dividends, and capital gains. It excludes Roth IRA withdrawals (more on that below) and assets themselves.
For early retirees, the primary sources of MAGI to manage are: traditional IRA and 401(k) withdrawals (each dollar withdrawn is fully taxable income); taxable pension income; required minimum distributions if you are old enough to have them; dividend and interest income from taxable investment accounts; and realized capital gains. Each of these can be managed to some degree through timing and asset location decisions. The goal is to keep MAGI at a level that maximizes premium tax credits while still meeting living expenses—a strategy sometimes called ACA harvesting.
The ACA Premium Cliff in 2026: Has the 400% FPL Cap Returned?
Before the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, households with income above 400% of the federal poverty level received zero ACA premium tax credits—the income cliff. A dollar of income crossing that threshold could eliminate thousands of dollars in annual subsidy in an instant. The ARP eliminated this cliff and capped everyone’s contribution at 8.5% of income for the benchmark Silver plan regardless of income. The Inflation Reduction Act extended these enhanced rules through plan year 2025.
For 2026 coverage, absent further Congressional extension, the standard pre-ARP rules with the income cliff technically apply. This has major implications for early retirees whose MAGI is in the range of 350-500% FPL. A couple filing jointly at 400% FPL in 2026 is at approximately $81,760 in annual income. A dollar of income above that threshold eliminates any subsidy under standard rules. The income cliff creates a perverse incentive to keep MAGI below the 400% level through whatever means available. Early retirees should work with a tax professional or financial planner to model their MAGI carefully against the 400% FPL threshold when standard rules are in effect.
Sources: KFF ACA FAQ
If enhanced subsidies have not been extended to 2026, an early retiree couple with $82,000 in MAGI could lose $10,000-$16,000 per year in premium tax credits because they crossed the 400% FPL threshold by $240. This is not a small rounding error—it is potentially the difference between $500/month and $2,000/month in health insurance premiums. Managing income below the cliff is worth significant tax and investment planning effort if you are within range.
Option 3: Employer Retiree Health Benefits — A Vanishing But Valuable Option
Employer-sponsored retiree health coverage—where a former employer contributes to or subsidizes health insurance for retired employees before age 65—has become increasingly rare. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, only about 21% of large employers offered retiree health benefits as of recent surveys, down from over 60% three decades ago. If your employer offers this benefit, it is one of the most valuable parts of your retirement package and deserves careful evaluation.
Retiree health benefits vary widely in structure. Some employers continue a group health plan at a subsidized premium, similar to active employee coverage. Others provide a defined contribution to a health reimbursement account that you use to purchase your own coverage. Still others offer retiree benefits only until you reach Medicare eligibility, at which point they transition to Medicare supplement contributions. Before retiring, obtain the complete summary plan description for any retiree health benefit and model the actual cost and coverage quality against COBRA and ACA alternatives.
- Verify eligibility requirements: most plans require minimum age (often 55+) and minimum service years (often 10-15 years)
- Calculate the actual premium you would pay vs. employer contribution
- Confirm whether the benefit is vested (can
- Check whether retiree benefits affect your ACA subsidy eligibility (they generally do, as employer coverage)
- Determine whether the plan is primary or secondary to Medicare after age 65
- Compare the plan
Option 4: Spouse or Domestic Partner
If your spouse or domestic partner is still employed and has employer-sponsored health insurance, enrolling as a dependent on their plan is often the simplest and most cost-effective option for early retirees. Employer group plans typically provide coverage for spouses and domestic partners (in Connecticut, domestic partners may have specific enrollment rights), and the employer usually contributes to dependent premiums at least partially.
Retirement from your own job qualifies as a Special Enrollment Period for your spouse’s employer plan. Most employer plans allow dependent enrollment within 30 days of a qualifying life event—which includes a spouse losing coverage. Miss this 30-day window and you may have to wait until your spouse’s employer’s next open enrollment. Verify the exact SEP rules with your spouse’s HR department before your retirement date. Some employer plans have stricter eligibility rules, waiting periods, or premium structures for late-enrolling dependents.
If you enroll in your spouse’s employer plan, you are generally ineligible for ACA marketplace subsidies because you have access to qualifying employer-sponsored coverage. However, if your spouse’s employer plan is comprehensive and the dependent premium is reasonable, it is almost certainly better than a full-cost ACA plan or COBRA. Calculate the actual cost of enrolling on your spouse’s plan—including your share of the dependent premium—and compare it to your COBRA cost and any ACA marketplace plan after subsidies.
Option 5: Connecticut Medicaid (HUSKY Health) for Low-Income Early Retirees
Connecticut expanded Medicaid under the ACA, covering adults with income at or below 138% of the federal poverty level—approximately $20,783 for a single adult in 2026. For most early retirees, income this low is not the target, but circumstances can push MAGI into this range: a retiree drawing exclusively from Roth accounts, living off savings principal without triggering income, or in a low-income year before pension or Social Security begins could find themselves Medicaid-eligible. HUSKY D covers low-income adults under the ACA Medicaid expansion.
Sources: CT HUSKY Health Program
HUSKY enrollment is year-round with no enrollment period. Coverage is comprehensive—the same essential health benefits required of ACA plans—at little or no premium cost. The trade-off: Medicaid networks in Connecticut are narrower than most commercial plans, and not all specialists accept Medicaid. For early retirees with complex health needs and established specialty care relationships, Medicaid may present network access challenges. For healthy early retirees in a transitional low-income year, it represents genuine premium-free coverage.
Income Planning to Maximize ACA Subsidies: The Early Retiree Playbook
The defining insight of ACA planning for early retirees is that subsidies are based on income, not wealth. A retiree with a $3 million portfolio who generates only $45,000 in MAGI may qualify for more ACA premium tax credits than a working teacher earning $65,000. This creates a powerful incentive to structure retirement income to minimize taxable MAGI during the pre-Medicare years, while still funding living expenses from non-MAGI sources like Roth distributions, principal from after-tax savings, or HSA withdrawals for medical expenses.
The income planning window before traditional retirement account distributions become mandatory—before RMDs begin at age 73—is the most flexible period for managing MAGI. Early retirees who have accumulated both Roth and traditional accounts have the most flexibility: they can draw from Roth (no MAGI impact) for living expenses while doing partial Roth conversions on traditional accounts in years when MAGI would otherwise be low, filling up lower tax brackets before reaching the subsidy-reducing thresholds.
- Delay Social Security to age 65 or later: SS benefits before 65 count as taxable income in the year received
- Draw Roth IRA funds for living expenses: qualified Roth distributions do not count in MAGI
- Spend down taxable brokerage accounts (principal return only) before triggering IRA withdrawals
- Do partial Roth conversions in low-income years: convert traditional IRA dollars to Roth up to just below the subsidy cliff threshold
- Time capital gains realizations: harvest gains in years when MAGI is already above subsidy cliffs to avoid wasting the tax headroom
- Use HSA funds for medical expenses: HSA distributions for qualified medical costs are tax-free and not counted in MAGI
- Municipal bonds for interest income: muni interest is not included in MAGI
- Manage rental property income through depreciation and expense deductions to reduce net MAGI from real estate
Roth IRA Laddering and ACA Subsidy Strategy for Connecticut Early Retirees
The Roth IRA ladder is one of the most powerful tools in the early retiree’s health care cost reduction arsenal. Because qualified Roth IRA distributions are not included in MAGI, a retiree who has built up significant Roth balances—either through direct contributions over the years or through strategic pre-retirement Roth conversions—can fund living expenses during the early retirement period without triggering MAGI that would reduce ACA subsidies.
The conversion ladder works as follows: in the years before retirement, or in low-income years early in retirement, convert portions of traditional IRA or 401(k) funds to a Roth IRA. You pay income tax on the converted amount in the year of conversion, but once in the Roth account, future qualified withdrawals are tax-free and MAGI-invisible. For ACA subsidy purposes, you want these conversions to happen in years before you need them for living expenses—because the conversion itself increases MAGI in the conversion year.
An advanced Roth conversion strategy for Connecticut early retirees: in your final working years, make Roth conversions up to the level that keeps MAGI below the 400% FPL threshold (if the income cliff is in effect for 2026). Pre-retirement conversions at favorable tax rates can reduce future required minimum distributions, lower the taxable portion of Social Security, and create a Roth pool that lets you control MAGI precisely in the years between retirement and Medicare. This strategy requires multi-year planning and ideally coordination with a fee-only financial planner.
Sources: IRS Affordable Care Act Information
Using HSA Funds in Early Retirement: Tax-Free Health Care Spending
Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) offer a triple tax advantage: contributions are tax-deductible (or pre-tax), growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. For early retirees, accumulated HSA balances represent a reserve of tax-free medical spending power that can be drawn on without affecting MAGI. This is a powerful combination with the ACA subsidy strategy: draw living expenses from Roth accounts (no MAGI impact) and pay medical costs from the HSA (also no MAGI impact), keeping taxable income—and thus ACA-qualifying income—at subsidy-optimal levels.
To maximize HSA accumulation before early retirement, maximize contributions each year while on a High Deductible Health Plan (HDHP). For 2026, the HSA contribution limit is $4,300 for individual coverage and $8,550 for family coverage, with a $1,000 catch-up contribution available for those 55 and older. After enrolling in Medicare, you can no longer contribute to an HSA, so the window for accumulation ends at 65. A retiree who consistently maxed HSA contributions over a working career could have $100,000-$300,000 or more in tax-free medical spending reserves.
Medicare Part A enrollment is retroactively backdated six months from your application date. If you are still making HSA contributions in that six-month lookback window, you will have made ineligible contributions that trigger a tax penalty. Stop new HSA contributions at least six months before you plan to enroll in Medicare—and pause them the moment you apply for Social Security if you are 65 or older, because Social Security enrollment automatically triggers Medicare Part A.
Cost Comparison: COBRA vs. ACA Marketplace for Connecticut Early Retirees at 55, 60, and 62
The following comparison illustrates estimated monthly costs for a single Connecticut early retiree under COBRA versus an ACA marketplace plan, at three retirement ages and two income scenarios. These figures use 2026 illustrative estimates based on known cost trends; actual costs depend on your county, carrier, and specific plan selection. Couple coverage costs are roughly double these individual figures.
The cost difference between COBRA and a subsidized ACA plan is dramatic for most early retirees. At 300% FPL, a 60-year-old Connecticut resident might pay $370/month for a Silver ACA plan versus $1,200/month or more for COBRA—a difference of over $10,000 per year. Over five years to Medicare, that difference compounds to $50,000+. The catch: the ACA plan may have a different network and likely a higher deductible. If you are healthy and rarely use expensive care, the ACA plan’s math is compelling. If you have ongoing specialist relationships or scheduled procedures, the COBRA network continuity may be worth the premium for the first few months.
Pre-Medicare Dental and Vision Coverage for Connecticut Early Retirees
ACA marketplace health plans cover pediatric dental and vision as essential health benefits for enrollees under 19, but adult dental and vision coverage is not included in standard marketplace health plans. Connecticut early retirees need to make separate arrangements for dental and vision coverage. Options include standalone dental plans sold through Access Health CT or directly from insurers, employer retiree dental benefits if offered, dental discount plans (not insurance but reduce costs at participating providers), or simply paying dental costs out of pocket, supplemented by HSA funds.
Vision coverage is similarly not included in adult ACA health plans. Standalone vision plans are available at relatively low cost—typically $15-$25 per month for basic vision coverage—through VSP, EyeMed, and other vision carriers. These cover annual eye exams and provide allowances toward eyeglasses or contact lenses. If you wear corrective lenses and have regular eye appointments, a vision plan is generally worth the modest monthly premium. Dental coverage is more complex: premiums range from $25-$80 per month per person for standalone dental plans, and most plans have annual maximum benefits of $1,000-$2,000, waiting periods for major work, and exclusions for cosmetic procedures.
Planning the Transition to Medicare at 65: How Early Retiree Decisions Affect Your Medicare Enrollment
Every health care decision you make during the early retirement period has implications for Medicare enrollment. The most important: if you are enrolled in employer-sponsored coverage (your own or a spouse’s active employer plan), you are protected from late enrollment penalties and can delay Medicare enrollment past 65. However, if you are on COBRA, ACA marketplace coverage, retiree health benefits, or your own individual plan—these do not count as employer coverage for Medicare purposes, and you must enroll in Medicare Part B during your Initial Enrollment Period around your 65th birthday to avoid permanent late enrollment penalties.
The Medicare Initial Enrollment Period runs from three months before your 65th birthday month through three months after—a seven-month window. If you have continuous creditable coverage from an active employer plan through age 65, you have an eight-month Special Enrollment Period to sign up after that coverage ends. If you are on ACA marketplace coverage or COBRA at 65, your Initial Enrollment Period governs: missing it means a 10% permanent penalty on Part B premiums for every 12-month period you delayed, compounding for the rest of your life.
Sources: HealthCare.gov Medicare Transition
One important interaction: your ACA marketplace coverage must end when Medicare begins. You cannot receive premium tax credits for a marketplace plan while enrolled in Medicare. If you enroll in Medicare Part A (even just Part A), you are ineligible for APTC on a marketplace plan, and you should disenroll from your marketplace plan to avoid receiving credits you will have to repay. Coordinate the exact end date of your marketplace plan with the start date of your Medicare coverage to eliminate any gap or overlap.
The consequences of Medicare enrollment mistakes—missing the IEP, overpaying due to IRMAA surcharges from prior-year income, or taking APTC while on Medicare—can cost thousands of dollars over a retirement lifetime. Begin Medicare planning no later than age 64: contact Social Security, confirm your enrollment window, and review IRMAA income thresholds to minimize Medicare surcharges based on your pre-65 income decisions.